The Scottish Mail on Sunday

The Archers? It’s even more sexist than James Bond!

Why? Because academics say the women always talk about the men (poor lambs)

- By Chris Hastings ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

THE Archers is so steeped in sexism that it makes a 1960s James Bond film seem almost politicall­y correct.

That is the conclusion of an academic study of the long-running Radio 4 drama which concluded its female characters are often depicted as obsessed with men.

However, the controvers­ial findings have been criticised by longterm fans of the show as well as leading feminist Germaine Greer.

Researcher­s used an analytical tool known as the Bechdel Wallace test to examine the dialogue in 128 Archers episodes broadcast between February and June last year. Only shows including at least one scene in which two or more women talk about a subject other than men for 30 seconds were deemed to pass muster.

Just 43 episodes – a third – made it through, while the rest failed.

By contrast, even the 1963 James Bond film From Russia With Love passes the test, featuring as it does a scene in which two women talk for more than a minute before mentioning the opposite sex.

The results of the study are published in a new book, Gender, Sex And Gossip In Ambridge – putting the show in which women seem to have ruled the roost since it began in 1951 in a very different light.

Co-author Dr Nicola Headlam said: ‘When we listen to The Archers, this kind of stuff just washes over us. Yes, there are a lot of women in Ambridge but in some ways, they are the property of the farm just as much as the livestock.’

You magazine columnist and lifelong Archers fan Elizabeth Day said: ‘This really surprises me.

‘My impression of the women in Ambridge is that they often talk about farming processes like pasteurisi­ng yoghurt or anaerobic digestion – and, to be honest, that’s often to the detriment of the story.

‘Perhaps when the women do talk within the so-called domestic sphere, they are actually discussing matters which are at the heart of running a farm.’

And feminist Germaine Greer defended the show, saying: ‘It’s probably true to say that when most women talk to other women they talk about men and their feelings.

‘Conversati­ons about family and domestic matters are not necessaril­y trivial.’

‘Women are property of the farm like livestock’

Gender, Sex And Gossip In Ambridge: Women In The Archers, by Cara Courage and Nicola Headlam, is published by Emerald Publishing, priced £14.99.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom